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A Stable Particle Filter in High-Dimensions

We consider the numerical approximation of the filtering problem in high dimensions, that is, when the hidden state lies in $\mathbb{R}^d$ with $d$ large. For low dimensional problems, one of the most popular numerical procedures for consistent inference is the class of approximations termed particle filters or sequential Monte Carlo methods. However, in high dimensions, standard particle filters (e.g. the bootstrap particle filter) can have a cost that is exponential in $d$ for the algorithm to be stable in an appropriate sense. We develop a new particle filter, called the \emph{space-time particle filter}, for a specific family of state-space models in discrete time. This new class of particle filters provide consistent Monte Carlo estimates for any fixed $d$, as do standard particle filters. Moreover, we expect that the state-space particle filter will scale much better with $d$ than the standard filter. We illustrate this analytically for a model of a simple i.i.d. structure and one of a Markovian structure in the $d$-dimensional space-direction, when we show that the algorithm exhibits certain stability properties as $d$ increases at a cost $\mathcal{O}(nNd^2)$, where $n$ is the time parameter and $N$ is the number of Monte Carlo samples, that are fixed and independent of $d$. Similar results are expected to hold, under a more general structure than the i.i.d.~one. independently of the dimension. Our theoretical results are also supported by numerical simulations on practical models of complex structures. The results suggest that it is indeed possible to tackle some high dimensional filtering problems using the space-time particle filter that standard particle filters cannot handle.

preprint2014arXivOpen access
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